JFK's famous words were my first to game-collectors Manuel Schulz and Miron
Schmidt as I emerged into the main concourse of Berlin's Tegel Airport in
for a twelve-day July vacation in Germany!

In addition to the normal tourist-trap stuff and a little game-hunting
European-style which Manuel was kind enough to show me, I had the
opportunity to visit the Computer
und VideoSpiele Museum in person. Nice adventure cronology, with
machines set up demoing the actual games, and a nifty Infocom display
case. Check it out if you ever get over there.

I also had the pleasure of browsing the personal collections of Berlin's
I-F collector's base -- Manuel, Miron Schmidt and Paul David Doherty
specifically. Quite impressive. I saw a lot of things I previously hadn't
known existed, so my personal wants-list is tremendously expanded this
update.

Game-hunting European-style, for the record, is pretty much the same as how
we do it here in the states, except really old stuff is much harder to come
by overseas. But that didn't stop me from walking away with a Guild of
Thieves, an Icom Deja Vu folder, Ancient Land of Ys, a
European Corruption, two Ultima games, and the German versions of
Bard's Tale, Maniac Mansion, both Simon the Sorcerer games,
and BattleTech: The Crescent Hawk's Revenge. (Not an Infocom grey
in sight, though!) Some of these items are for sale or trade this update,
others have honored positions in my own collection.

I had an absolute blast, Manuel. Thanks again! (Confidential to Manuel
and Lotte: Yes, Green Day is cool. But Rancid is cool too!)

Lotsa topics to cover in the column this time, so let's dive right in!

Guidance

If you missed the announcement on the I-F newgroup, I'll tell you here:
The I-F collecting community's first
price guide is here.

Wait, hear me out. It's not at all disastrous like it may sound.

I know I've bashed guides in the past, from fear of price-fixing, but:
(1) This one has been put together by one of our own, Manuel Schulz. And
(2) I had an opportunity to actually preview the thing while I was over in
Germany, and can safely assure everyone that it doesn't so much set prices
as establish price-ceilings.

What Manuel has done is identified the absolute maximum amount a
collector should ever reasonably expect to pay for games, and has even
broken down values into "shrinkwrapped", "opened but near-mint", and
"other" categories. It's an excellent guide, with package details, scans
and even short essays on the various software companies... Did I mention
it's organized by company? Some ommissions, but these'll be filled in in
the next edition, I'm sure. It's available now for $15.00 + shipping from
Manuel Schulz,
tell him I sent ya.

Price Gouging, Revisited

A variety of responses regarding my thoughts on high prices last time. Most
YOISers who replied seemed to agree with the prices I list. What surprised
me was the fact that those who complained tended to accuse me of devaluing
their collections by listing quotes that were too low. Only one
collector thought some categories in YOIS were overpriced. (Don't worry,
I'm not going to react by raising prices.)

Unclaimed Freight

Wondering why this update took so long? In addition to my being a lazy
slob, a good part of the reason is the outrageous number of unclaimed
packages I've had sitting around waiting for payments to arrive. It got
so bad I finally just hauled everything back into the Shoppe. This is
frustrating, especially when you have other potential buyers inquiring
about something you've already promised to someone else.

So, as of this update, new policy. If someone asks about an item I've got
reserved for someone else, I'm marking down the date. If, two weeks from
that date, payment has not yet arrived, the item goes to the new buyer.
Orders paid for too late will be shipped incomplete with a refund for the
missing item(s). When I update the Shoppe, all unclaimed pieces are
goin' back in (although I will make allowances here for last-minute orders).
No excuses, no exceptions, I'm tired of holding stuff for 2 - 3 updates and
it makes for a mess in the Shoppe.

Shadowkeep's Keeper

Okay. Telarium's Shadowkeep. Does anyone actually have this damn
thing, with the original package? I know one person who says he has one,
and I know another guy who's got the code, but jeez, you'd think this thing
would be more common considering the Alan Dean Foster mass-market paperback
novel promoting it was actually published (it even mentions Trillium on the
cover). LMK if you've got one. I promise not to harass you about selling.

While we're on the subject of Telariums, does anyone have any of the "ASL"
packages? These are a fourth package format for the Telarium / Trillium
titles, and I got to see a couple in the collections of Manuel Schulz and
Miron Schmidt. They come in a plastic case with the same cover art as the
other three deals, but with the ASL logo in addition to Telarium's. ASL
stands for "Audiogenre Software Ltd." All but Shadowkeep and The
Scoop were released like this for Atari ST, PC and possibly Amiga.

Collector's Blight

Having trouble finding the novel Blight by Infocom's Michael Berlyn
(author of Suspended, Infidel, Cutthroats, Fooblitzky)? In a recent
chat with Berlyn himself, I learned that the novel was published under a
pseudonym. "Mark Sonders" is the author you're looking for.

Now. I still can't find this book, so there's an Infocom item of
your choice (folios included!), plus shipping both ways, awaiting the first
Shoppe-er to dig one up for me. Used book stores are your best bet, though
your local library may sell their copy if you sweeten the price enough.

Don't bother checking Amazon.com or Barnes and Noble online, I've already
tried and their searches don't even turn up the title. Ace is the publisher,
though they're long out of stock.

Software and Less?

Okay, now for the big news this month. (Actually, this column is horridly
late, so most of you probably already know about this.)

No doubt if you're on the
Software & More
mailing list, you've noticed their new classification system for package condition.
What is it, "D" means definitely new shrinkwrap, "P" means probably new
shrinkwrap, some other letter means something else? Something like that.

The reason for this is... well, I'll just let Software & More explain it in
their own words:

"Over the past couple of months we have been actively looking for
shrinkwraped packages. We have been getting suspiciuos of some things.
Some of the non-collectible stuff we have sold (for use) when it was
opened was used. That is why I changed our web page from describing
things as new to believed to be NEW because we were told it was new
when we bought it and the shrinkwrapping looked professional. That is
also why some packages are priced a little lower because I'm not sure
or suspect of it. Sometimes we know for sure, if we got it from our
storage (We bought it originally or got it from Egghead when they
dropped Apple, Commodore etc). As we start to inspect packages better
and see more of the same package then we have a better idea if it could
be re-shrinkwraped. We are learning that you can't just go by how well
the shrinkwrapping looks anymore."

"We have gotten 3 big shipments in from a much larger company than us
(We are just a little store with 2 people) in the last few months from
which a couple of your pieces came...You can usually tell when it is
redone by a small machine because it is not meant to look new just to
keep the product from being stolen...They are not selling it to us as
collectibles (most isn't anyway) and we aren't telling them because the
price will go up...I contacted the big company we bought software from
and asked them if they shrinkwrap packages. He said they did (he called
it 'the conveyor', whatever that means). He didn't understand why we
were upset because 'everything works'. He said they shrinkwrap about
10 - 15%. The rest is 'the original shrinkwrap'."

Software & More wouldn't reveal the name of their source (well that's just
business-sense), but they were very forward with me about the problems
they've been experiencing. It's a dilemma: how to get this source of theirs
to stop reshrinking packages without telling them that customers treat the
original wrap differently from a rewrap (and then having to explain
why, that they're collectible, without getting prices raised, etc). Anyway,
that's the Software & More story.

Suspended: The board in the face-mask folio is larger. The folio,
grey-box and C64 folders all have the board folded differently to fit in the
package. Some have a white-backed board, some black.

Enchanter: The scroll in the folio is folded differently than the
grey-box.

Sorcerer: The Infotater is replaced by a "field guide".

Planetfall: The diary pages are larger in the folio.

Deadline: The crime scene photo and reports are larger in the
folio.

Witness: The letters and case materials are larger in the folio.

Seastalker: The Infocard reader is built into the folio package,
but is a removable prop in the grey-box.

Zork 1 - 3: Two sizes of blister packs, a large square one and
a smaller rectangular InvisiClues-sized one. Contents are identical, just
the package size is a little different. Some of the early large square ones
have 8" disks, most have 5.25".

Zork 2: Early versions of the blister pack manual have the word
"NEW!" in a yellow stripe across the upper-right corner.

FAQs I Get Asked All the Time but Apparently Need to Clarify Once AGAIN

The most recent list is always on the web site. I don't maintain any
"secret, more-recent list" between updates. How it works is: I print a copy
of the list and mark off stuff when it's actually sent out. When new items
come in, they go in what I call "The Pile". When I update the Shoppe, I
delete the sold items from the list and type in the stuff from "The Pile".
I don't go through and list what's in "The Pile" until the actual update.
If there's something specific you want me to check "The Pile" for, just ask.
(I may put your request onto the waiting
list if I'm in the middle of an update when you ask, in the interest
of keeping the Shoppe organized better.)

The "two of my opened Infocoms for one of your shrinked Infocoms" deal is
still open, but I wasn't very clear before. I meant two items of the same
type, for instance two opened greys for one shrinked grey, or two opened
folios for one shrinked folio. I didn't mean mix-and-match. Sorry about
the confusion there. (See my want-list below for which titles I still need
in wrap.) Incidentally, I'm a tad paranoid of so-called "shrinked" packages
because of the little Software & More fiasco. I'd prefer to inspect the
packages myself before making any committments. I'll pay shipping both
ways if I don't like the look of the package.

No, I don't make pirate copies, and I don't know where to get pirate copies,
and even if I did I would lie and say I didn't.

I only make "legal" PC-playable copies if you buy a valid copy from me.
Doesn't matter if you can prove you have a valid copy from some other source,
you don't get a PC copy from YOIS unless you buy the original from YOIS as
well. I have more important things to do than make copies of every obscure
game for everyone who needs them in a playable format.

New This Month

As I type this, I have in the Shoppe the product that killed Infocom.
I've finally got one extra set of Cornerstone disks and a manual.
Maybe more in the future, who's to say.

Aside from that... Hooboy. I gotta start updating this list more
often. Nothing much that I haven't had before. Plenty of greys, some
wrapped, more not. New InvisiClues, maps, novels, props. A little of
everything.

As a final note, don't overlook the non-IF stuff. A lot of it turns up in
large shipments or boxes of games in thrift stores and I sell 'em cheap
(although that's also where I chuck the Ultimas, Wizardry,
anything I can't classify as I-F). Most of these'll go under $10, in some
cases $5, in other cases I'll toss 'em in free with your order just to free
up some Shoppe space.